10 x 4 – MPIA3

MPIA3 is London based producer Tuss, who just debuted on R&S Records with Your Orders , a six-track EP of stomping, acid-tinged techno.

Moritz Gayard

Earlier this month, London-based producer MPIA3, better known as Truss of Perc Trax, released an uncompromising and morbidly vascular techno EP, entitled Your Orders, through R&S Records. A label which defined techno way back when the only place to listen to this kind of music was the beloved Tresor cellar. Decades after, with the likes of Vondelpark, Egyptian Hip Hop and JamesBlake taking up space on the roster, it looks like R&S are back on track. Do not this confuse this project with Truss’s main gig; while the likes of “Ganymede” and “Hackney” paid their own dues to Belgium, MPIA3 takes things one of two steps further. Featuring track names like “Crusty Juice”, “Roly Poly Babs” and “Acid Badger”, we don’t need to tell you that these are thick-girthed acid steamrollers, rife with squarewaved basslines and punishing, gouging stabs. Get an idea of MPIA3 and listen to his monstrous Boiler Room set. There’re even some glimpses of Human Resource to explore.

1. Your most memorable show?
In the wake of the unfortunate disaster that was the Bloc Festival at the ill-fated London Pleasure Gardens, London promoters Plex rallied to arrange a last minute free party at Peckham’s Bussey Building for anyone with a Bloc wristband. A loud, heaving rave ensued with temperatures hotter than the surface of the sun.

2. What goes in your coffee?
I’m a tea man.

3. What does underground and mainstream mean to you?
Increasingly little in an age of instant accessibility to music and information.

4. Should music be free?
It should be up to the composer to decide.

5. Better show: Buffy or X-Files?
X-Files all the way.

6. What defines your music-making process?
Feelings of excitement and euphoria when I think I’ve made a good track, followed by extreme self doubt when I begin to realise it’s not actually that good after all.